http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7497119.stm
BBC News
Friday, 11 July 2008
Bangladesh's unwanted people
By Mark Dummett
At first glance, Geneva Camp could be any of Dhaka's overcrowded and
filthy slums.
But above it flies Pakistan's green flag, with a red strip sewn on the
side to represent, I was told, the suffering of the people there.
In the camp's school, the children first sing the Bangladesh national
anthem at assembly, and then, after prayers, they belt out Pakistan's.
Loyalties are divided.
"When I grow up I want to stay in this country and become a teacher,"
one girl tells me. But her classmate wants to go to Pakistan. " My
grandmother lives in Karachi so I really want to go there," she says.
When I ask a group of youths which cricket team they sup****ted when
Pakistan recently played Bangladesh they all replied, "Pakistan".
But did they want to live there? "No, it is far too dangerous.
Bangladesh is a peaceful country. We don't have any Taleban here,"
they said.
'Huge mistake'
Their lessons are in the local language Bengali, but their mother
tongue is Urdu, the language of north Indian Islam, which their great-
grandparents brought to Bangladesh in 1947 when it was then the
eastern wing of Pakistan.
During the partition of India along religious lines, several hundred
thousand Muslims, mostly from the Indian state of Bihar, came with
them.
They were given houses and jobs by the government, but because they
could not speak Bengali, they spent most of their lives apart from
their countrymen.
The school's headmaster, Shawkat Ali, has a framed ****trait of
Pakistan's founder Mohammed Ali Jinnah above his desk.
He says that his grandfather's decision to listen to Jinnah and leave
India in 1947 was a huge mistake.
"Our family lost everything when we moved to Pakistan. We lost in
India, then we lost in Pakistan, and now we are in Bangladesh," he
said.
"We are the beggars on the footpath. Our people are leading a horrible
life."
East Pakistan came to a bloody end in 1971 when the Bengali majority
demanded greater autonomy for their province and then won a national
election.
Pakistan responded by sending in its army. Nine months and a re****ted
three million deaths later it pulled out and Bangladesh became an
independent country.
Most Urdu-speakers had sup****ted Pakistan, and some joined the militia
responsible for atrocities. Thousands of Urdu-speaking civilians were
also killed.
After the war, they were forced to abandon their homes and businesses,
and herded into 70 Red Cross camps, awaiting repatriation to
Pakistan.
But it only took in about half of them, and today there are 250,000 to
400,000 people still living in these same camps.
Several generations, and often several families, now share the small
rooms each was originally given.
Banglade****s in all but name
Shawkat Ali, the headmaster, is also one of the leaders of the
Stranded Pakistanis General Repatriation Committee which calls for
Pakistan to take in everyone who wants to go there.
"Our fathers and forefathers gave their blood for the creation of
Pakistan. We have opted to go to Pakistan, and we should go there at
the earliest," he said.
But many of the younger generation believe that Bangladesh will not
help them if they continue to insist they are Pakistanis, and that the
calls for repatriation have only made their lives harder.
Pakistan meanwhile says that it has taken in everyone it had agreed to
following the war. It might accept more, but only on "humanitarian
grounds".
In any case, many of the younger Urdu-speakers say they are
Banglade****s in all but name.
"There is no question of returning us to Pakistan. We haven't seen
that country, we don't know that country, we were born and brought up
here and we want to die here in dignity," Sadakat Khan, a community
leader said.
He now hopes things will pick up for the Urdu-speakers after winning a
historic victory in Bangladesh's Supreme Court last month.
The court ruled that anyone born in the country who did not refer to
himself or herself as a "Stranded Pakistani", could vote in this
year's upcoming elections.
And if they have the right to vote, Mr Khan says, the Urdu-speakers
will then have the right to citizen****p, government jobs, medical
care, education, land owner****p and foreign travel.
"We were deprived of the rights of a state for 36 years, but now we
are getting them," he said. "With this ruling, the future of our
children has been saved."
He hopes that nearly four decades of life as a stateless, unwanted
people has finally come to an end.


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